gnunet.org is now again reachable via IPv6 (at 2001:4ca0:2001:42:230:48ff:febb:4bca) --- as it should be for the first P2P network that fully supports IPv6 (we've had partial support since about 2002).

We've recently been targeted more and more by spammers. Making the captcha's harder doesn't seem to stop them (just makes it nearly impossible for normal humans to submit...), and the automated posts are just too much work to deal with on a daily basis. So we're changing the process for postings by adding another access level: "real" users. After you sign up for an account, you will only be an "authenticated" user, which means you can see some data usually hidden, but posting is restricted to comments, and those are also moderated.

It is on the todo list for GNUnet, but nothing about it can be found on this website. The discussion was mainly on GNUnet's old website, long gone, but a leg of the discussion (and "possible design" for GNUnet's P2P chat is here:

Unfortunately the old Drupal had a quite more extensive discussion (at least one thread that started here, and went on with possible implementation details), but, well, better small documentation then none :-)

We now have an initial draft for a setup tool for the upcoming GNUnet 0.9.0 release. Unlike the Guile-based gnunet-setup from 0.8.x, the new tool uses Glade and Gtk+, making it easier for designers to tweak the UI -- and hopefully easier for developers to add auto-configuration features as well, making the "wizard" mode obsolete.

The topic presented was a new NAT traversal technique which uses dummy ICMP or UDP packets to punch a hole through NAT boxes. The direct contribution to GNUnet is another method for reaching peers that would be otherwise inaccessible.

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